The mestizaje (mixture)of Indians
and Spaniards is the principal fact of Mexican racial history. And yet, the details are even more complicated.

The race mixture is so thorough that among Mexico’s
mestizo majority, within the same nuclear family you can find full siblings, with the same mother and father, who are very
dark and very light-skinned.

But it’s not only the skin color. Some Mexicans have
white skin but indigenous racial features, while others have dark skin but European facial features.

Then there's eye color. When I first moved to Mexico it
struck me how many Mexicans would make it a point to tell me they had relatives with blue or green eyes. And sure enough,
there are blue- and green-eyed Mexicans. Eye color is inherited from both parents. If someone has blue eyes, it’s because
both his parents have the genes for it (dominant or recessive).

When the Spaniards arrived in the early 1500s, the nation-state
of Mexico did not exist. What is now Mexico was a large landmass inhabited by many ethnic groups. Although they
would now all be classified as “Indians” or “Indigenous,” there were physical differences among these
groups, just as there are between different people groups in Europe. The Indians of northern Mexico, for one thing,
were taller than those of the south, and their heads were shaped a little differently.

Even the Spaniards were not exactly homogeneous. The Iberian
Peninsula was a melting pot of many peoples: the mysterious “Iberians,” Phoenicians, Greeks, Celts, Romans, the
Teutonic Goths, the Moors and the Jews. Even today Spain has its sharp regional divisions, and areas where other languages
are spoken: Catalonia, Galicia and the Basque Country, where people still speak a language unrelated to any known in the world
today.

Besides the Spaniards and the Indians, there were many
other groups that contributed to Mexico’s racial heritage. Blacks from Africa were brought over and settled largely,
but not entirely, in coastal areas. After emancipation they mostly assimilated to the Spanish-speaking majority, but in certain
regions you can still detect strong Negroid facial features.

As for the Spaniards, they never stopped coming. Even after
independence Spanish immigrants have continued to emigrate to Mexico, and have assimilated rather easily.

But other non-Spanish Europeans have also come to Mexico:
Germans, French and Dutch, for example.

Middle Eastern immigrants were mostly from Lebanon and
Palestine, and predominantly from Christian and not Muslim backgrounds. Also, there have been immigrants from East Asia, mostly
China and Japan.

Mexico also has a Jewish community. The first Jews to come
to Mexico were conquistador Catholics of Jewish background.

Anglo-Saxons too have immigrated; both British and Americans,
some of the latter were ex-Confederates who came to Mexico after the Civil War.

All these form part of the Mexican melting pot. And now,
with advances in biotechnology, and the breaking of the DNA code, it can be traced through the genes.

This was the goal of Mexico’s National Institute
of Genomic Medicine, which recently concluded a 2-year study of the Mexican genome, investigating blood samples from a representative
sample of Mexicans, half male and half female. The project’s director was Dr. Gerardo Jimenez-Sanchez.

Generally speaking, the genome research confirmed what
was already obvious about the mixed origins of the Mexican population. The project concluded that Mexicans are the product
of the mixture of 35 ethnic groups.

Roughly speaking, the Mexican population was calculated
to be 65 percent indigenous and 35 percent non-indigenous (European, African, Asian).

Of course, there is great regional variety as well. According
to the Mexican Genome Project, the population of the northern state of Sonora is 58 percent European. The population
of the Pacific state of Guerrero is 22 percent African origin.

This is all very interesting, and it has its medical uses
as well since medical predispositions often follow racial backgrounds. As Dr. Jimenez-Sanchez pointed out, medicines
that are developed in the United States and Europe are not ideal for Mexicans (except for the Euro-Mexicans of course).

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Allan Wall,
a MexiData.info columnist, recently returned from a tour of duty in
Iraq.He currently resides in Mexico, where he has lived since 1991. He can be reached
via e-mail at allan39@prodigy.net.mx.